The current NBA investigation into the Los Angeles Clippers has mainly been a one-sided affair in the public perception department, and optically.
Mark Cuban, the Dallas Mavericks minority owner, has been in Clippers owner Steve Ballmer's corner and on the side of Los Angeles from the beginning of the findings by Pablo Torre from "Pablo Torre Finds Out."
From the CEO who signed the contract.
— Mark Cuban (@mcuban) September 12, 2025
“In the months of discussion among our executives before signing the sponsorship, I don’t remember conversations about the NBA salary cap,” https://t.co/Pz8ke2PrbL
Even with the scrutiny weighing heavily against Los Angeles, it is clear that there is still much to uncover and sort through before the NBA makes a decision.
New reporting from Mike Vorkunov of The Athletic revealed some vital new information that could help the Clippers' case in the NBA's investigation of Kawhi Leonard.
“The contract specified that Leonard would, among other asks, participate in one eight-hour day of production, one four-hour day of public relations, two one-hour community service events, one five-minute segment per week 'in conversation with (Clippers) Coach Ty Lue' while he sat out the 2021-22 season recovering from an injury," Vorkunov wrote.
EXCLUSIVE: Kawhi Leonard's $1.75M "no-show" payday was running late.
— Pablo Torre Finds Out (@pablofindsout) September 11, 2025
Then, per new documents obtained by @PabloTorre, the Clippers' co-owner invested $1.99M in the team's broke sponsor.
Nine days later, Kawhi got paid.
"It is beyond shocking," an Aspiration executive says. pic.twitter.com/yxOYGfo3dZ
He continued to state, "But the deal, which allowed Aspiration to terminate it for cause or if Leonard was no longer playing for the Clippers, also gave Leonard sign-off on the requests and allowed him to refuse to do anything 'not consistent with his beliefs.'”
If the reporting and documents prove to be true on The Athletic's end, then Leonard could have an explanation for not showing up to his required endorsement deal tasks.
The Athletic also reached out to Andrei Cherny, the co-founder of Aspiration, and received a response that could also go against Pablo Torre's reporting that Leonard's contract with Aspiration was a "no-show" deal.
"When reached by The Athletic this week, Andrei Cherny, Aspiration’s co-founder and CEO until 2022, disputed that Leonard had a no-show contract. He said the beliefs clause is standard for celebrity endorsements and that the company could end the agreement if Leonard didn’t perform on his end," Vorkunov said.
"I never heard a whiff of anything around an endorsement deal with Kawhi [Leonard] or anything around an engagement with the Los Angeles Clippers."
— ESPN (@espn) September 10, 2025
Silver responds as the NBA launches an investigation into whether the Clippers arranged a $28M endorsement deal for Kawhi Leonard. pic.twitter.com/LrwPAlrkMi
Cherny's observation that the company could have ended the agreement with Leonard if he failed to perform his duties could be a critical point in the investigation.
It would completely counter the narrative that the deal was a "no-show" job, as a legitimate contract would have grounds for termination if the partner failed to fulfill their end of the bargain.
With reports swirling, documents being leaked, and new evidence being presented, it is fair to say that there is no end in sight for the NBA's investigation.
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